Few photographers transformed fashion imagery as profoundly as Arthur Elgort. When he emerged in the 1970s, fashion photography was still largely confined to the studio: carefully composed, polished, and distant. Elgort introduced something radically different — movement, spontaneity, and life. Models laughed, ran, traveled, ate lunch, disappeared into crowds and stepped into the world beyond the set. What now feels instinctive was once a complete departure from convention. His photographs felt less like productions and more like moments that simply happened to be witnessed.
“Claudia Schiffer, Lunch in Rome” by ARTHUR ELGORT
There is a recognizable rhythm that runs through his work. Whether photographing supermodels, musicians or scenes from everyday life, there is always a feeling of intimacy — a sense that the camera arrived just in time witnessing something unfold rather than something staged. That instinct became one of his defining signatures and transformed the visual identity of magazines including Vogue.
“Kate Moss in Nepal, for British Vogue 1993” by ARTHUR ELGORT
The works selected this week reveal the extraordinary breadth of that vision. “Claudia Schiffer Lunch in Rome” transforms a fleeting afternoon into cinematic storytelling. “Photographers Before the Louis Vuitton Show” captures an entire era of fashion through the intensity of anticipation rather than the runway itself. “Stella Tennant Jumping into a Pool” remains one of those images only Elgort could create — elegant and playful at once, balancing sophistication with complete unpredictability.
“Stella Tennant Jumping into a Pool” by ARTHUR ELGORT
“Photographers Before the Louis Vuitton Show, 2003” by ARTHUR ELGORT
Elgort understood something many other photographers did not: fashion is never only about clothes. It is about personality, atmosphere and memory. That instinct led him to photograph Kate Moss with an elephant in Nepal, Linda Evangelista and Christy Turlington at the height of the supermodel era, Iman with sculptural drama, or young ballet students preparing backstage in St. Petersburg. Different subjects, different worlds, yet all connected by a remarkable ability to recognize energy and humanity.
“Skaters at Eiffel Tower, Paris 1990” by ARTHUR ELGORT
What makes these photographs exceptional today is not simply the iconic names or cultural moments they contain. It is the feeling they preserve. Elgort photographed some of the most recognizable figures and defining eras of the late twentieth century, but his images continue to feel contemporary because they were never created to follow trends. They were built on instinct, personality and a rare understanding of timing.
“Madonna, New York City 1988” by ARTHUR ELGORT
“Romy Schneider, Paris 1982” by ARTHUR ELGORT
Each work in this Arthur Elgort selection is offered as a limited edition fine art photography print, made to order and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed and numbered by the artist. More than photographs, they represent moments that shaped visual culture and continue to influence generations of fashion and image-making today.
PREISS FINE ARTS is pleased to present this weekly highlight celebrating Arthur Elgort — a photographer who did not simply document an era, but changed the way we see it.
“Maggie Rizer Mehran and Ryan Locke for Vogue Magazine 1998” by ARTHUR ELGORT







